Well, now you're talking just about metric. I have absolutely no idea if it's any use to you but I built my own JSON for conversions here as I standardised my own software. I feel like I might have shared it before
4 hours later…
04:37
@VLAZ From what I read, in anticipation of EU GDPR stopping applying to the UK in 2021, the UK legislated a separate UK GDPR law back in 2018. Whether the UK ICO (Information Commissioner’s Office) actually enforces it, how aggressively, how large the penalties etc. compared to EU DPAs, I don't know. Perhaps you could do some reading and inquiring and let us know.
@roganjosh ^ and otter.ai transcription consent has been controversial since Feb 2022, since otter was asserting consent to sharing the transcript with other services: "This journalist’s Otter.ai scare is a reminder that cloud transcription isn’t completely private".
Meanwhile, perhaps the less nuclear protocol for interviews and business meetings is to have the other party confirm by email before the meeting that it will not be transcribed by AI, or that transcripts will not be shared with third parties, or to tell them you won't do the inerview/meeting if they don't. Essentially, assume AI transcription as the new opt-out. Or you could start a HN thread to list employers who don't user Otter.ai transcription/ share interview transcripts with third parties.
^ That's pobably going to exclude a lot of companies. Maybe the more achievable win is to make sure they don't use Otter and use (say) Whisper.
From a quick skim of HN for "UK ICO enforce", they don't seem to be enforcing against AI on consent, only against low-tech transfers of bulk data and nuisance SMS spammers, as of 2021 article. Maybe you can find more up-to-date information.
So, a charitable read is the UK ICO seems to be 2+ decades behind the curve... by the time they get around to dealing with this stuff, all our data will have been gathered and resold.
One may to estinate their capabilities (or lack of) is to count how many tech-savvy lawyers they have on staff (or read their publications)... if they don't have many staff who know what a violation looks like, then it ain't looking good.
Here's the UK ICO Annual Report for 2023/4 from July 2024 (and previous years); seems like fairly low-level policinga nd "reminding people of their obligations", very few criminal prosecutions if any (see p. 41). See p. 20 "We have also carried out a series of audits looking at the use of AI in the recruitment sector. Later in 2024, we expect to publish an outcomes report, detailing our findings."
Imagine if the regulatory response to bank robbers was for the police to "remind them of their obligations"...
@Slate Appreciate the message. I think you need to define these terms better, when you say *" I mean “we” to refer to the three major roles: consumers of the knowledge stored here, those who create and store knowledge, and the people who operate the place itself (not limited to employees), who all together produce the thing we call “SE” ...
... should we call those "consumers", "contributors" and "volunteers/moderators/employees", unless you or anyone here can improve on that. Second, how many people/users fall in each category, bearing in mind not all of those are registered SE users (e.g. inbound visitors from a Google or other search), and some may be bots, or even scrapers (until they get banned for ToS violations). Do we have numbers on those? What is the ratio of registered vs unregistered human vs bot consumers in 2024?
Also there are (many, millions of) indirect "downstream consumers" via the data dump which SO sells to customers for training AIs, we have zero visibility of those and SO monetizes our volunteer-supplied content. Where's a list of which orgs SO sells to? People are not necessarily opposed to reselling and we all understand the commercial realities, but we have zero visibility of that, ...
...which kind of makes a mockery of the above categories. Ultimately, what happens if/when downstream AI consumers become the main revenue source for SO. How will that drive site behavior? Oh and us voluntary content providers don't get attribution from AI (unlike say if we moved our content to a Medium or Substack or other blog).
Here's the CPO "calling for attribution", 1/2024" "We (SO) continue to stand firm on our non-negotiables—quality and attribution of AI outputs are the only way to ensure accuracy and trust going forward and drive real time-savings for developers.". But where is the evidence or guarantee that said attribution is actually happening? ...
If you can give some convincing replies (with numbers), then people might join that Meta discussion/chatroom.
One way to measure the effect of AI on SO would be to compare quality, volume of Q&A and revenue on the private corporate Stack Overflow for Teams vs plain SO. Who's got metrics on that?
Here's one user comment: "Why we stopped using Stack Overflow for Teams, and why we won't use the OverflowAI". Let's take it 100% of corporate users already have paid licenses of Slack/MS Teams/ free Discord. An extra $6.50+/user/mth seems steep.
It seems like the endgame that downstream AI consumers become SO's main revenue source, if that hasn't already happened.
This: "10 Steps Stack Overflow Took To Secretly Boost Revenue By $65M with SaaS" says 60% of SO's revenue is SaaS . "Assuming [SaaS] customers continue to pay $1,100 per year on average (extrapolated from 2020 Active Campaign revenues of $165m with 150k customers)..."
And from Wired 4/2023 article: "When AI companies sell their models to customers, they “are unable to attribute each and every one of the community members whose questions and answers were used to train the model, thereby breaching the Creative Commons license,” Chandrasekar says."
@ThomasOwens I'm an SRE so I focus on keeping the app running optimally, feature requests would go to a dev team. I'm giving rationale from my team's point of view. As far as hard numbers, in the last hour there were around 3.88mm requests to Stack Overflow. Around 984k requests were from non-verified bots. Without digging too deep, I'd say the majority of those requests are from scrapers and undesired. As far as respecting robots.txt, it'll be abundantly clear which bots are respecting it and what's not once we make the change, I can't give more details beyond that. — Josh Zhang ♦ Dec 3 at 21:11
2 hours later…
09:04
@smci This is what is troubling for me. The most telling issue is that not one person from the legal profession has even touched my question; it was just programmers throwing around ideas in the comments. I cannot do research better than a trained law professional in this space and nobody has proffered any input :/ Still, there's time left on my bounty yet
@roganjosh The legal answer to your question (under UK GDPR) is largely irrelevant since the UK ICO doesn't seem to be at the races... as I see it your practical options are a) give up and accept this as the new normal b) at least confirm in writing before interviews/meetings if/which AI transcription is used and who it is shared with c) file a UK ICO complaint but don't hold your breath d) emigrate.
In which case, I will still wait until something along those lines is written by a legal professional because I still want the actual clarity for people to find, and not just have random threads of people throwing out "GDPR!" everywhere when none of us really seems to know what that even amounts to here. It would be good for others if we have some solid reference
09:21
@roganjosh I don't live in the UK, don't ask me. Why not try to ask in UK data-privacy NGOs, user groups, figure out which journalists at www.TheRegister.com or elsewhere cover this best. Try also the EU NGOs and EFF [eff.org/deeplinks/2021/06/gdpr-privacy-and-monopoly]. Or find an MP or junior minister who gives a hoot...
But that just provides me an answer, if any, and that's not what I want. I want something canonical that other companies can look at and make a sound decision on their own data policy as to whether or not these are acceptable tools for employees to use etc. They have their own SOC2 and ISO27001 accreditations to protect
...I found this article *"UK to replace GDPR with ‘consumer-friendly’ privacy regime", 10/2022 mentioning Michelle Donelan, (former) Conservative secretary of state for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, but seems she left that office in 7/2024.
@roganjosh You're trying to duplicate the job of the UK ICO for them. Why not ask the ICO directly, the NGOs and the minister and shadow minister. Also make your own GDPR request to the companies involved to find out what data was stored on you and who it was shared with; inspect and summarize the main problems in your correspondence.
I mean, you could contact Austrian privacy campaigner Max Schrems of None of Your Business - "We enforce your right to privacy" who's probably one of the best and most dogged commentators (on EU GDPR), but since you're looking at UK GDPR not EU GDPR, they'd probably refer to you someone else.
09:31
I was going to say "also ask your MEP" but you no longer have MEPs. But maybe some of the more privacy-aware MEPs from EU countries (DE, AT, BE) might be worth asking.
@roganjosh Ok, got it. All I'm saying is if you want action before 2030, treat it as a tactical/civil rights question not a legal question. Anyhow, I do recommend you formally request (under UK GDPR, in writing) a copy of all data stored on you by Otter.ai and who it was shared with. Seems like a sensible startpoint, Good luck.
09:46
1 hour later…
12:03
@smci As my first league of legends character I used to main says: "Laws or whatever works at the time"
@roganjosh That is pretty normal for government agencies. I do their job all the time for them. They basically just sit there look at some test documents and press a button here or there and in the end stamp stuff. Government is horrible and the worst is I have no clue how to improve it, how to measure efficiency and if it was better in the past or not. Welp, it's the world we live in. I feel definitely very sympathetic to DOGE
6 hours later…
17:51
@smci I think your rewording is broadly correct. Internally we often refer to consumers, contributors, curators as categories of user, even. I do think it's important to say that they are roles, not types of users, though. Like, someone can be an active consumer of SO knowledge, and also a curator, but not a contributor.
In my post, I went with essentially what you're describing here: contributors, consumers, and instead of curators I went with "everyone who makes the system work." A bit over-broad in some respects but I think it probably got the point across
I think for this post's value, it suffices to limit our view of "consumers" to people who are consuming content written directly on the site itself, i.e. people who would actually come to stack overflow dot com to get the knowledge they're looking for. That's not to say this point is meritless, but rather that the question's intent is to focus on the people and processes that take place on SE
We could fold in how knowledge propagates through human connection, for instance, but at that point we're out of Stack into the realm of social systems theory
You've asked a lot of numerical questions, and I'm not sure which reflect genuine curiosity and which ones are rhetorical. Is there anything that stands out to you in particular? I'm happy to try and answer them to the best of my ability, though I gotta warn you in advance there's some stuff I just can't answer (financial details e.g., or queried data from SOfT, which runs into security compliance issues).
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